<h2><SPAN name="THE_CORN_OF_WHEAT_DYING_TO_BRING" id="THE_CORN_OF_WHEAT_DYING_TO_BRING">THE CORN OF WHEAT DYING TO BRING FORTH FRUIT.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="small">"And Jesus answered them, saying, The hour is come, that the Son of man
should be glorified. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except a corn of wheat fall
into the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth much
fruit. He that loveth his life shall lose it: and he that hateth his life in this
world shall keep it unto life eternal."—<span class="smcap">John</span> 12:23-25.</p>
<p class="p2"><span class="smcap">Certain</span> Greeks desired to see Jesus. These were
Gentiles and it was remarkable that they should, just at
this time, have sought an interview with our Lord. I
suppose that the words "We would see Jesus" did not
merely mean that they would like to look at him, for
that they could have done in the public streets; but
they would "see" him as we speak of seeing a person
with whom we wish to hold a conversation. They desired
to be introduced to him, and to have a few words
of instruction from him.</p>
<p>These Greeks were the advanced guard of that great
multitude that no man can number, of all nations, and
people, and tongues, who are yet to come to Christ.
The Saviour would naturally feel a measure of joy at
the sight of them, but he did not say much about it, for
his mind was absorbed just then with thoughts of his
great sacrifice and its results; yet he took so much notice
of the coming of these Gentiles to him that it gave
a color to the words which are here recorded by his
servant John.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I notice that the Saviour here <i>displays his broad humanity</i>,
and announces himself as the "Son of man." He
had done so before, but here with new intent. He says,
"The hour is come, that the Son of man should be
glorified." Not as "the Son of David" does he here
speak of himself, but as "the Son of man." No longer
does he make prominent the Jewish side of his mission,
though as a preacher he was not sent to save the lost
sheep of the house of Israel; but as the dying Saviour
he speaks of himself as one of the race, not the Son of
Abraham, or of David, but "the Son of man": as much
brother to the Gentile as to the Jew. Let us never forget
the broad humanity of the Lord Jesus. In him all
kindreds of the earth are joined in one, for he is not
ashamed to bear the nature of our universal manhood;
black and white, prince and pauper, sage and savage,
all see in his veins the one blood by which all men are
constituted one family. As the Son of man Jesus is
near akin to every man that lives.</p>
<p>Now, too, that the Greeks were come, our Lord <i>speaks
somewhat of his glory</i> as approaching. "The hour is
come," saith he, "that the Son of man should be glorified."
He does not say "that the Son of man should be
crucified," though that was true, and the crucifixion
must come before the glorification; but the sight of
those first-fruits from among the Gentiles makes him
dwell upon his glory. Though he remembers his death,
he speaks rather of the glory which would grow out of
his great sacrifice. Remember, brethren, that Christ is
glorified in the souls that he saves. As a physician wins
honor by those he heals, so the Physician of souls gets
glory out of those who come to him. When these devout
Greeks came, saying, "Sirs, we would see Jesus,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
though a mere desire to see him is only as the green
blade, yet he rejoiced in it as the pledge of the harvest,
and he saw in it the dawn of the glory of his cross.</p>
<p>I think, too, that the coming of these Greeks somewhat
<i>led the Saviour to use the metaphor of the buried corn</i>.
We are informed that wheat was largely mixed up with
Grecian mysteries, but that is of small importance. It
is more to the point that our Saviour was then undergoing
the process which would burst the Jewish husk in
which, if I may use such terms, his human life had been
enveloped. I mean this: aforetime our Lord said that
he was not sent save to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel, and when the Syrophenician woman pleaded for
her daughter he reminded her of the restricted character
of his commission as a prophet among men. When he
sent out the seventy, he bade them not to go into the
cities of the Samaritans, but to seek after the house of
Israel only. Now, however, that blessed corn of wheat
is breaking through its outer integument. Even before
it is put into the ground to die the divine corn of
wheat begins to show its living power, and the true
Christ is being manifested. The Christ of God, though
assuredly the Son of David, was, on the Father's side,
neither Jew nor Gentile, but simply man; and the
great sympathies of his heart were with all mankind.
He regarded all whom he had chosen as his own brethren
without distinction of sex, or nation, or the period
of the world's history in which they should live; and, at
the sight of these Greeks, the true Christ came forth
and manifested himself to the world as he had not
done before. Hence, perhaps, the peculiar metaphor
which we have now to explain.</p>
<p>In our text, dear friends, we have two things upon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
which I will speak briefly, as I am helped of the Spirit.
First, we have <i>profound doctrinal teaching</i>, and, secondly,
we have <i>practical moral principle</i>.</p>
<p>First, we have <span class="smcap">profound doctrinal teaching</span>.</p>
<p>Our Saviour suggested to his thoughtful disciples a
number of what might be called doctrinal paradoxes.</p>
<p>First, that, <i>glorious as he was, he was yet to be glorified</i>.
"The hour is come, that the Son of man should be glorified."
Jesus was always glorious. It was a glorious
thing for the human person of the Son of man to be
personally one with the Godhead. Our Lord Jesus had
also great glory all the while he was on earth, in the
perfection of his moral character. The gracious end for
which he came here was real glory to him: his condescending
to be the Saviour of men was a great glorification
of his loving character. His way of going about
his work—the way in which he consecrated himself to
his Father and was always about his Father's business,
the way in which he put aside Satan with his blandishments,
and would not be bribed by all the kingdoms of
the world—all this was his glory. I should not speak
incorrectly if I were to say that Christ was really as to
his moral nature never more glorious than when throughout
his life on earth he was obscure, despised, rejected,
and yet the faithful servant of God, and the ardent
lover of the sons of men. The apostle says, "The
Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and we
beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of
the Father, full of grace and truth," in which he refers
not only to the transfiguration, in which there were
special glimpses of the divine glory, but to our Lord's
tabernacling among men in the common walks of life.
Saintly, spiritual minds beheld the glory of his life, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
glory of grace and truth such as never before had been
seen in any of the sons of men. But though he was
thus, to all intents and purposes, already glorious, Jesus
had yet to be glorified. Something more was to be
added to his personal honor. Remember, then, that
when you have the clearest conceptions of your Lord,
there is still a glory to be added to all that you can see
even with the word of God in your hands. Glorious as
the living Son of man had been, there was a further
glory to come upon him through his death, his resurrection,
and his entrance within the veil. He was a glorious
Christ, and yet he had to be glorified.</p>
<p>A second paradox is this—that <i>his glory was to come
to him through shame</i>. He says, "The hour is come, that
the Son of man should be glorified," and then he speaks
of his death. The greatest fulness of our Lord's glory
arises out of his emptying himself, and becoming obedient
to death, even the death of the cross. It is his
highest reputation that he made himself of no reputation.
His crown derives new lustre from his cross;
his ever living is rendered more honorable by the fact of
his dying unto sin once. Those blessed cheeks would
never have been so fair as they are in the eyes of his
chosen if they had not once been spat upon. Those
dear eyes had never had so overpowering a glance if
they had not once been dimmed in the agonies of death
for sinners. His hands are as gold rings set with the
beryl, but their brightest adornments are the prints of
the cruel nails. As the Son of God his glory was all his
own by nature, but as Son of man his present splendor
is due to the cross, and to the ignominy which surrounded
it when he bore our sins in his own body.
We must never forget this, and if ever we are tempted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
to merge the crucified Saviour in the coming King we
should feel rebuked by the fact that thus we should rob
our Lord of his highest honor. Whenever you hear
men speak lightly of the atonement stand up for it at
once, for out of this comes the main glory of your Lord
and Master. They say, "Let him come down from the
cross, and we will believe on him." If he did so what
would remain to be believed? It is on the cross, it is
from the cross, it is through the cross that Jesus mounts
to his throne, and the Son of man has a special honor in
heaven to-day because he was slain and has redeemed us
to God by his blood.</p>
<p>The next paradox is this—<i>Jesus must be alone or abide
alone</i>. Notice the text as I read it: "Except a corn of
wheat fall into the ground and die," and so gets alone,
"it abideth alone." The Son of man must be alone in
the grave, or he will be alone in heaven. He must fall
into the ground like the corn of wheat, and be there in
the loneliness of death, or else he will abide alone.
This is a paradox readily enough explained; our Lord
Jesus Christ as the Son of man, unless he had trodden
the winepress alone, unless beneath the olives of Gethsemane
he had wrestled on the ground, and as it were
sunk into the ground until he died, if he had not been
there alone, and if on the cross he had not cried, "My
God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" so that he
felt quite deserted and alone, like the buried corn of
wheat—could not have saved us. If he had not actually
died he would as man have been alone forever: not
without the eternal Father and the divine Spirit, not
without the company of angels; but there had not been
another man to keep him company. Our Lord Jesus
cannot bear to be alone. A head without its members<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
is a ghastly sight, crown it as you may. Know ye not
that the church is his body, the fulness of him that filleth
all in all? Without his people Jesus would have
been a shepherd without sheep; surely it is not a
very honorable office to be a shepherd without a flock.</p>
<p>He would have been a husband without his spouse;
but he loves his bride so well that for this purpose did
he leave his Father and become one flesh with her
whom he had chosen. He clave to her, and died for
her; and had he not done so he would have been a
bridegroom without a bride. This could never be. His
heart is not of the kind that can enjoy a selfish happiness
which is shared by none. If you have read Solomon's
Song, where the heart of the Bridegroom is revealed,
you will have seen that he desires the company of
his love, his dove, his undefiled. His delights were
with the sons of men. Simon Stylites on the top of a
pillar is not Jesus Christ; the hermit in his cave may
mean well, but he finds no warrant for his solitude in
him whose cross he professes to venerate. Jesus was
the friend of men, not avoiding them, but seeking the
lost. It was truly said of him, "This man receiveth
sinners, and eateth with them." He draws all men
unto him, and for this cause he was lifted up from the
earth. Yet must this great attractive man have been
alone in heaven if he had not been alone in Gethsemane,
alone before Pilate, alone when mocked by soldiers,
and alone upon the cross. If this precious grain
of wheat had not descended into the dread loneliness of
death it had remained alone, but since he died he
"bringeth forth much fruit."</p>
<p>This brings us to the fourth paradox—<i>Christ must die
to give life</i>. "Except a corn of wheat fall into the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth
forth much fruit": Jesus must die to give life to
others. Persons who do not think confound dying with
non-existence, and living with existence—very, very
different things. "The soul that sinneth it shall die:"
it shall never go out of existence, but it shall die by
being severed from God who is its life. There are many
men who exist, and yet have not true life, and shall
not see life, but "the wrath of God abideth on them."
The grain of wheat when it is put into the ground dies;
do we mean that it ceases to be? Not at all. What is
death? It is the resolution of anything possessing life
into its primary elements. With us it is the body parting
from the soul; with a grain of wheat it is the dissolving
of the elements which made up the corn. Our
divine Lord when put into the earth did not see corruption,
but his soul was parted from his body for a while,
and thus he died; and unless he had literally and actually
died he could not have given life to any of us.</p>
<p>Beloved friends, this teaches us where the vital point
of Christianity lies, <i>Christ's death is the life of his teaching</i>.
See here: if Christ's preaching had been the essential
point, or if his example had been the vital point, he
could have brought forth fruit and multiplied Christians
by his preaching, and by his example. But he declares
that, except he shall die, he shall not bring forth
fruit. Am I told that this was because his death would
be the completion of his example, and the seal of his
preaching? I admit that it was so, but I can conceive
that if our Lord had rather continued to live on—if he
had been here constantly going up and down the world
preaching and living as he did, and if he had wrought
miracles as he did, and put forth that mysterious,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
attracting power, which was always with him, he might
have produced a marvellous number of disciples. If
his teaching and living had been the way in which
spiritual life could have been bestowed, without an
atonement, why did not the Saviour prolong his life on
earth? But the fact is that no man among us can know
anything about spiritual life except through the atonement.
There is no way by which we can come to a
knowledge of God except through the precious blood
of Jesus Christ, by which we have access to the Father.
If, as some tell us, the ethical part of Christianity is
much more to be thought of than its peculiar doctrines,
then, why did Jesus die at all? The ethical might have
been brought out better by a long life of holiness. He
might have lived on till now if he had chosen, and still
have preached, and still have set an example among the
sons of men; but he assures us that only by death could
he have brought forth fruit. What, not with all that holy
living? No. What, not by that matchless teaching?
No. Not one among us could have been saved from
eternal death except an expiation had been wrought by
Jesus' sacrifice. Not one of us could have been quickened
into spiritual life except Christ himself had died
and risen from the dead.</p>
<p>Brethren, all the spiritual life that there is in the
world is the result of Christ's death. We live under a
dispensation which shadows forth this truth to us. Life
first came into the world by a creation: that was lost in
the garden. Since then, the father of our race is Noah,
and life by Noah came to us by a typical death, burial,
and resurrection. Noah went in unto the ark, and was
shut in, and so buried. In that ark Noah went among
the dead, himself enveloped in the rain and in the ark,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
and he came out into a new world, rising again, as it
were, when the waters were assuaged. That is the way
of life to-day. We are dead with Christ, we are buried
with Christ, we are risen with Christ; and there is no real
spiritual life in this world except that which has come
to us by the process of death, burial, and resurrection
with Christ. Do you know anything about this, dear
friends?—for if you do not, you know not the life of
God. You know the theory, but do you know the experimental
power of this within your own spirit? Whenever
we hear the doctrine of the atonement attacked,
let us stand up for it. Let us tell the world that while we
value the life of Christ even more than they do, we know
that it is not the example of Christ that saves anybody,
but his death for our sakes. If the blessed Christ had lived
here all these nineteen hundred years, without sin, teaching
all his marvellous precepts with his own sublime
and simple eloquence, yet he had not produced one
single atom of spiritual life among all the sons of men.
Without dying he brings forth no fruit. If you want
life, my dear hearer, you will not get it as an unregenerate
man by attempting to imitate the example of Christ.
You may get good of a certain sort that way, but you
will never obtain spiritual life and eternal salvation by
that method. You must believe on Jesus as dying for
you. You have to understand that the blood of Jesus
Christ, God's dear Son, cleanses us from all sin. When
you have learned that truth, you shall study his life with
advantage; but unless you recognize that the grain of
wheat is cast into the ground, and made to die, you will
never realize any fruit from it in your own soul, or see
fruit in the souls of others.</p>
<p>One other blessed lesson of deep divinity is to be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
learnt from our text: it is this—<i>since Jesus Christ did
really fall into the ground and die, we may expect much as the
result of it</i>. "If it die, it bringeth forth much fruit."
Some have a little Christ, and they expect to see little
things come of him. I have met with good people who
appear to think that Jesus Christ died for the sound
people who worship at Zoar Chapel, and, perhaps, for a
few more who go to Ebenezer in a neighboring town,
and they hope that one day a chosen few—a scanty
company indeed they are, and they do their best by
mutual quarrelling to make them fewer—will glorify
God for the salvation of a very small remnant. I will
not blame these dear brethren, but I do wish that
their hearts were enlarged. We do not yet know all
the fruit that is to come out of our Lord Jesus. May
there not come a day when the millions of London shall
worship God with one consent? I look for a day when
the knowledge of the glory of God shall cover the earth
as the waters cover the sea, when kings shall fall down
before the Son of God, and all nations shall call him
blessed. "It is too much to expect," says one; "missions
make very slow progress." I know all that, but
missions are not the seed: all that we look for is to
come out of that corn of wheat which fell into the
ground and died: this is to bring forth much fruit. When
I think of my Master's blessed person as perfect Son of
God and Son of man; when I think of the infinite glory
which he laid aside, and of the unutterable pangs he
bore, I ask whether angels can compute the value of
the sacrifice he offered. God only knows the love of
God that was manifested in the death of his Son, and
do you think that there will be all this planning and
working and sacrifice of infinite love, and then an insig<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>nificant
result? It is not like God that it should be so.
The travail of the Son of God shall not bring forth a
scanty good. The result shall be commensurate with
the means, and the effect shall be parallel with the
cause. The Lord shall reign for ever and ever. Hallelujah!
Ay, as the groanings of the cross must have
astounded angels, so shall the results of the cross
amaze the seraphim, and make them admire the excess
of glory which has arisen from the shameful death of
their Lord. O beloved, great things are to come out of
our Jesus yet. Courage, you that are dispirited. Be
brave, you soldiers of the cross. Victory awaits your
banner. Wait patiently, work hopefully, suffer joyfully,
for the kingdom is the Lord's, and he is the governor
among the nations.</p>
<p>Thus have I spoken upon profound divinity.</p>
<p>I close with a few words upon <span class="smcap">practical instruction</span>.
Learn now that what is true of Christ is in
measure true of every child of God: "Except a corn of
wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone:
but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit." This is so
far applicable to us, as the next verse indicates—"He
that loveth his life shall lose it; and he that hateth his
life in this world shall keep it unto life eternal."</p>
<p>First, <i>we must die if we are to live</i>. There is no spiritual
life for you, for me, for any man, except by dying
into it. Have you a fine-spun righteousness of your
own? It must die. Have you any faith in yourself?
It must die. The sentence of death must be in yourself,
and then you shall enter into life. The withering
power of the Spirit of God must be experienced
before his quickening influence can be known: "The
grass withereth, the flower fadeth: because the spirit<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
of the Lord bloweth upon it." You must be slain by
the sword of the Spirit before you can be made alive by
the breath of the Spirit.</p>
<p>Next, <i>we must surrender everything to keep it</i>. "He
that loveth his life shall lose it." Brother, you can never
have spiritual life, hope, joy, peace, heaven, except by
giving everything up into God's hands. You shall
have everything in Christ when you are willing to
have nothing of your own. You must ground your
weapons of rebellion, you must drop the plumes of your
pride, you must give up into God's hand all that you
are and all that you have; and if you do not thus lose
everything in will, you shall lose everything in fact;
indeed, you have lost it already. A full surrender of
everything to God is the only way to keep it. Some of
God's people find this literally true. I have known a
mother keep back her child from God, and the child has
died. Wealthy people have worshipped their wealth,
and as they were God's people, he has broken their
idols into shivers. You must lose your all if you would
keep it, and renounce your most precious thing if you
would have it preserved to you.</p>
<p>Next, <i>we must lose self in order to find self</i>. "He that
hateth his life shall keep it unto life eternal." You must
entirely give up living for yourself, and then you yourself
shall live. The man who lives for himself does not
live; he loses the essence, the pleasure, the crown of existence;
but if you live for others and for God you will
find the life of life. "Seek ye first the kingdom of God
and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added
unto you." There is no way of finding yourself in personal
joy like losing yourself in the joy of others.</p>
<p>Once more: if you <i>wish to be the means of life to others,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
you must in your measure die yourself</i>. "Oh," say you,
"will it actually come to death?" Well, it may not,
but you should be prepared for it if it should. Who
have most largely blessed the present age? I will tell
you. I believe we owe our gospel liberties mainly to
the poor men and women who died at the stake for the
faith. Call them Lollards, Anabaptists, or what you
will, the men who died for it gave life to the holy
cause. Some of all ranks did this, from bishops downward
to poor boys. Many of them could not preach
from the pulpit, but they preached grander sermons
from the fagots than all the reformers could thunder
from their rostrums. They fell into the ground and
died, and the "much fruit" abides to this day. The
self-sacrificing death of her saints was the life and increase
of the church. If we wish to achieve a great purpose,
establish a great truth, and raise up a great agency
for good, it must be by the surrender of ourselves, yea,
of our very lives to the one all-absorbing purpose. Not
else can we succeed. There is no giving out to others,
without taking so much out of yourself. He who serves
God and finds that it is easy work will find it hard work
to give in his account at the last. A sermon that costs
nothing is worth nothing; if it did not come from the
heart it will not go to the heart. Take it as a rule that
wear and tear must go on, even to exhaustion, if we are
to be largely useful. Death precedes growth. The Saviour
of others cannot save himself. We must not, therefore,
grudge the lives of those who die under the evil
climate of Africa, if they die for Christ; nor must we
murmur if here and there God's best servants are cut
down by brain exhaustion: it is the law of divine
husbandry that by death cometh increase.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>And you, dear friend, must not say, "Oh, I cannot
longer teach in the Sunday-school: I work so hard all
the week that I—I—I"—shall I finish the sentence
for you? You work so hard for yourself all the week
that you cannot work for God one day in the week. Is
that it? "No, not quite so, but I am so fagged." Very
true, but think of your Lord. He knew what weariness
was for you, and yet he wearied not in well-doing. You
will never come to sweat of blood as he did. Come, dear
friend, will you be a corn of wheat laid up on the shelf
alone? Will you be like that wheat in the mummy's
hand, unfruitful and forgotten, or would you grow?
I hear you say, "Sow me somewhere." I will try to
do so. Let me drop you into the Sunday-school field,
or into the Tract-lending acre, or into the Street-preaching
parcel of land. "But if I make any great exertion
it will half kill me." Yes; and if it shall quite kill,
you will then prove the text, "If it die, it bringeth
forth much fruit." Those who have killed themselves
of late in our Lord's service are not so numerous that
we need be distressed by the fear that an enormous
sacrifice of life is likely to occur. Little cause is there
just now to repress fanaticism, but far more reason to
denounce self-seeking. O, my brethren, let us rise to
a condition of consecration more worthy of our Lord
and of his glorious cause, and henceforth may we be
eager to be as the buried, hidden, dying, yet fruit-bearing
wheat for the glory of our Lord. Thus have I merely
glanced at the text; another day may it be our privilege
to dive into its depths.</p>
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